There’s a tangible
feeling of “butchery theatre” about P J Kew’s shop in East Rudham, which you
can find just off the A47 in mid-Norfolk, between King's Lynn and Fakenham. While adhering to all the relevant hygiene
rules and regs, current owner Richard Cross maintains the atmosphere of a
fifties meaterie, from the original (and absolutely beautiful) hand-cranked
bacon slicer, through to the meat hooks dangling around, the original maker’s
plate on the door of a now-unused meat cooler and the huge scales hanging near
the windows. The original, partitioned
payment booth is still in use. It’s
almost a shrine to the butcher of the Famous Five era, and that alone should
encourage you to visit, gaze in awe and nostalgia, and enjoy. If he could cut and paste this place straight
into a trendy part of London overnight he’d be a millionaire within a week.
We first
visited P J Kew’s in April 2011, and tried out their KEWS-SAUSAGE . The sausages were “properly tasty bangers”
and the shopping experience was unparalleled – Richard is mega-genial and will
talk about every aspect of meat, Norfolk, food in general, you name it, reeling
off an abundance of interesting tales.
At the time of our previous visit Richard’s standard pork sausages were
simply called “Pork Sausages” but have since been renamed as Banquet Sausages,
which better reflects their appetite-busting bounty. A return trip was always on the cards....
When I
recently spotted Richard posing on Page Three of our local paper, the Lynn News
(no, NOT the same kind of pose as, say, Keeley, 22, from Cheltenham) my
curiosity was piqued. Have an ogle for
yourself: LYNN-NEWS-ARTICLE . Upon reading the piece I was intrigued by his
new idea of selling delicious, home-cured bacon through the post! What an utterly fantastic idea. And of course I wanted to try more of Kew’s
sausages....
Read on for
a review of Richard’s Pork & Sage bangers, and at the foot of the page
we’re offering three lucky readers the chance to receive a pack of their high
quality bacon through their very own letterbox!
I have tried some myself, and wow, the difference compared to the water-saturated
supermarket rubbish is immeasurable!
Meat
Content:
These
sausages seem to weigh twice as much per forkful as others. The meat is dense and juicy and satisfyingly
substantial.
Flavour:
Dark,
brooding, and rather rewarding. There’s
a thick, knobbly porkiness for a start, which is soon joined with the mild but
tasty warmth of the sage. The
ingredients suggest that this is almost a Lincolnshire sausage, but the flavour
is more compact and a little less spicy than its brother from just over the
border. Mind you, if they were labelled
as “Lincs” I’d probably say they were good ‘uns – and the day after cooking,
when cold, they did a VERY good impersonation, and tasted even better than on
day one.
Texture:
Wow, these sausages stick together tighter than the 24th
Foot Regiment at Rorke’s Drift. Cut
open, it’s actually difficult to push the innards apart to see what’s
what. When you do succeed, surprise
surprise, it’s pretty finely chopped pork, probably too fine for my personal
preference, but resulting in solid, manly bangers
Shrinkage:
Average
weight uncooked - 80g
Average
weight cooked - 61g
Shrinkage -
23%
Value For
Money:
£2.57 for
four sausages weighing 320g - this works out as a price of £7.99 per kg, or 64p
per snorker.
The Bisto
Factor:
Hmmm, a
sore point, but not in a bad way – I cooked these in the morning for inclusion
in a later meal and the delicious aroma was so, so tempting and provocative. How I resisted I’ll never know – when you cook
yours be ready for a huge, appetising bouquet.
Opening
Hours:
Eccentric! See photo.
Win
Post-A-Pack Bacon!
P J Kew’s
innovative Post-A-Pack bacon is very high quality, and absolutely
delicious. We have three packs to be won
by three lucky Rate My Sausage readers.
You can choose from four different cuts - smoked back bacon with either
a lean, medium or higher amount of fat, or smoked streaky bacon. Guaranteed gorgeousness!
All you
need to do to be in with a chance of winning is to visit the NORFOLK-BACON website and find out “how many years have
Richard’s family been making bacon?”
Then simply send an email to sausage-blog@live.com containing your name, county of the UK that you live in, and the
answer. Please write “Bacon” in the
subject line.
Only one
entry per email address, open to UK residents only. Entries must be received on or before May 16,
emails received after that date will not be entered in the draw. The winners will be chosen at random from all
correct entries at noon on Thursday 17 May, and we will contact you by email.
If you don't hear from RMS on that date then you haven't won, sorry.
Good luck!
The
pictures below show Post-A-Pack bacon just after I popped it into the pan, just
before I took it out, and also the home-made letter-box template that Richard
uses to ensure your bacon will fit through your door!
8 comments:
The sausage and bacon look delicious. Proper meaty and not full of nasty stuff :)
Welcome to Rate My Sausage Mr or Mrs Rambler. P J Kew is a good quality butcher, I recommend a visit if you're ever within striking distance.
Doh I meant to use my normal one.
Oh I will if I'm passing,
Bonnie
They're simply delish!
cool
the bacon looks lovely x
It all looks scrumptious! 10/10, delish... but your making me hungry now lol x
I see someone commented about the butcher:- "If he could cut and paste this place straight into a
trendy part of London overnight he’d be a millionaire within a week."
Instead this whole establishment has been sold for developement, it closed just before Christmas 2020. Already the old smokehouse is demolished.
End of!!
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